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Grenfell Tower firm has housing contract terminated | Grenfell Tower firm has housing contract terminated |
(34 minutes later) | |
The body that was responsible for the management of Grenfell Tower has had its contract to maintain social housing in Kensington and Chelsea terminated. | The body that was responsible for the management of Grenfell Tower has had its contract to maintain social housing in Kensington and Chelsea terminated. |
Councillors on Kensington and Chelsea Council unanimously voted to end the contract with Kensington & Chelsea Tenant Management Organisation. | Councillors on Kensington and Chelsea Council unanimously voted to end the contract with Kensington & Chelsea Tenant Management Organisation. |
Members said the TMO "no longer has the trust of residents in the borough". | Members said the TMO "no longer has the trust of residents in the borough". |
Council leader Elizabeth Campbell said 20 families affected by the fire are now in permanent accommodation. | Council leader Elizabeth Campbell said 20 families affected by the fire are now in permanent accommodation. |
She said a further 52 households had accepted an offer in principle. | She said a further 52 households had accepted an offer in principle. |
'Organised fashion' | 'Organised fashion' |
The TMO, which was established in 1996 to manage almost 10,000 properties in the borough, has been heavily criticised by residents following the fire, on 14 June. | |
In August, it was stripped of its responsibility for the management of properties in the Lancaster West housing estate, including Grenfell Tower. | In August, it was stripped of its responsibility for the management of properties in the Lancaster West housing estate, including Grenfell Tower. |
However, the council said it would now work with the TMO to bring its whole contract to an end. | |
Deputy council leader, Kim Taylor-Smith, said the contract would be ended "in an organised fashion", adding: "We are listening to residents and consulting on how they want their homes and neighbourhoods to be managed in the future." | Deputy council leader, Kim Taylor-Smith, said the contract would be ended "in an organised fashion", adding: "We are listening to residents and consulting on how they want their homes and neighbourhoods to be managed in the future." |
He cited a lack of confidence in the organisation's fire safety record and a unanimous vote of no confidence from 25 residents' associations. | He cited a lack of confidence in the organisation's fire safety record and a unanimous vote of no confidence from 25 residents' associations. |
Council leader Elizabeth Campbell said the council had bought 120 homes, while a further 20 purchases were in the hands of solicitors and 20 more under negotiation. | |
She told the meeting it was "not a time for haste, this is a time for getting it right" following criticism the authority had been too slow to rehouse survivors of the disaster. | |
"I am confident the number of people moving in to new homes will increase dramatically in the coming months," she said. | |
However, there were cries of "shame" from members of the public while another person shouted: "You move in to a tower block then." | |
Amnesty call | |
Labour councillor Robert Atkinson condemned the slow rate of progress at rehousing survivors, saying: "The council needs to be doing more and needs to be doing it faster." | |
He called on the government to recommit to promise an amnesty for any illegal migrants affected by the fire. | |
He said it was the only way for any inquiry to get to the truth. | |
It comes after police this month said the number of people who died in the fire may be a little lower than the previous estimate of 80. | |
They say the figure "may come down a little bit" because of some potential cases of fraud. | |
Scotland Yard also said it may consider individual as well as corporate manslaughter charges. |
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